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Ezra

In Ezra we witness the exiles' return to rebuild the temple. Destroyed by the Babylonians in 586 B.C., the temple is rebuilt and dedicated in 516 B.C. But it is nothing like the fabulous temple Solomon built. In fact, when those who had seen Solomon's temple see the second temple, they weep at its inadequacy!

2 Chronicles

In 2 Chronicles we continue the 1 Chronicles narrative, tracing the fall of the southern kingdom of Judah and its exile into Babylon captivity. As God observes in 1 Chronicles, "Israel went into captivity because of its unfaithfulness." This is a harrowing story of man's willful disobedience and God's righteous judgment.

1 Chronicles

If 1 & 2 Kings tell the story of the kings of Israel and Judah from man's point of view, then 1 & 2 Chronicles tell the story of the kings of Israel and Judah from God's point of view. From a literary perspective, 1 & 2 Chronicles form a recapitulation, a revisiting of familiar ground, offering new insights and new lessons. Join Logos Bible Study as Dr. Bill Creasy presents another masterful journey into one of the most compelling stories in human history.

Malachi

By 430 B.C. Israel is back in the land; the city of Jerusalem has been rebuilt; and the temple is operating once again. After the catastrophe of the Babylonian captivity one would think that Israel had learned its lessons. But, no. In Malachi, God levels eight accusations against his people, saying in effect: "I've got a number of bones to pick with you!"

Zechariah

Working hand-in-hand with the prophet Haggai, Zechariah also encourages the people to resume work on the temple in 520 B.C.; but unlike Haggai, Zechariah extends his prophecy to foreshadow future messianic and end-time events. Like Ezekiel, Zechariah has several "weird" visions, including that of an ugly woman in a flying bushel basket! Listen as Dr. Bill Creasy of Logos Bible Study explores this fascinating book.

Proverbs

As the Psalms take us into the heart of David, so do Proverbs, Ecclesiastes and the Song of Songs take us into the heart of Solomon. The book of Proverbs fits squarely into the genre of "advice to a son" literature. In this book Solomon offers advice to his son, advice to a young man going out into the world for the first time.

Haggai

When the exiles return to Jerusalem from the Babylonian captivity in 538 B.C., they begin to rebuild the temple that was destroyed by the Babylonians in 586 B.C. But very quickly resistance arises from the local population - not from military or mob attacks, but from an army of lawyers!

Zephaniah

In this book Zephaniah stands courageously and delivers a brutal message to the people: nothing will protect them from the day of God's judgment. In this account, Dr. Bill Creasy of Logos Bible Study opens the text and explores the stark, dreadful dark side of God's love.

Amos

God sends Amos to the northern kingdom of Israel to prophecy against it. Confronting the king and his priests, Amos tells the leaders precisely what will happen if they do not return to God: the northern kingdom of Israel will be destroyed by the Assyrians, and the high priest's wife will become a prostitute in the city! Join Logos Bible's Study's Dr. Bill Creasy as he highlights the social, political, and historical milieu of the era in which this most unlikely of prophets speaks.

Jonah

Jonah is one of the great stories in the Bible. Join Logos Bible Study's Dr. Bill Creasy as he tells this story as no one else can! When God commands Jonah to go to Nineveh, the capital of the Assyrian empire, and preach against it, Jonah heads in the exact opposite direction-to Tarshish, in Spain! Follow the adventure as a huge storm tosses Jonah's ship, the sailors hurl Jonah overboard and a huge fish swallows him!

Obadiah

When the Babylonian sacked Jerusalem in August of 586 B.C., the Edomites--descendants of Jacob's twin brother, Esau--looted the city. Obadiah is a 1-page book--the shortest book of prophecy in the Bible--that signals God's displeasure with Edom's actions. Join Logos Bible Study's Dr. Bill Creasy as he makes a stunning discovery about one of Esau's descendants who will appear in the New Testament!

Joel

Joel may be the earliest of the writing prophets; if he is, then he introduces the term "the Day of the Lord" as a reference to a set of final, catastrophic events that will befall Israel-and indeed all humanity in the "end times." Illustrating his message with reference to a dreadful locust plague that occurred in the past, we shudder as God makes clear that if Israel does not repent something much greater than a locust plague will occur.

Hosea

Both Isaiah and Hosea are writing at the same time, during the reigns of kings Uzziah, Jotham, Ahaz and Hezekiah, 740-686 B.C. In Isaiah 1-35, Isaiah hauls Israel into court, charging her with unfaithfulness, calling out witnesses and finding her guilty. The theme of these chapters is judgment. In Hosea, God says: "You know what I think; now I want you to know how I feel."

Lamentations

Lamentations is Jeremiah's eyewitness account of the terrible suffering of a people who watch priest and prophet killed in the temple and are driven in desperation to "eat their own children". Join Logos Bible Study's Dr. Bill Creasy as he explores the five acrostic poems that compose the book of Lamentations.

Ecclesiastes

Although remembered as a stunningly successful king, Solomon is the Bible's greatest failure in the end. And in Ecclesiastes, he admits it. Join Logos Bible Study's Dr. Bill Creasy as he explores Ecclesiastes, a study of Solomon in sharp contrast to his father, David.

John

Written considerably later that the Synoptic Gospels (Matthew, Mark, and Luke), John takes a very different approach to the Gospel story. Traditionally attributed to the "Beloved Apostle" John, this Gospel doesn't give us yet another version of the events in Jesus' public ministry; John illustrates what those events mean in light of 60 years of reflection upon them. The Gospel according to John is a brilliant book, and it offers us a profoundly intimate glimpse into the person and work of Jesus Christ.

Romans

Although Romans is not the earliest of Paul's writings, like Isaiah and Matthew, Romans sits at the head of the epistles and letters. Written as a formal argument and structured as a scholastic diatribe, Romans presents Paul's great thesis that we are saved by grace through faith, not by works of Law. This is revolutionary! Romans, perhaps more than any other book ever written, has fundamentally changed Western civilization, and it is foundational to understanding all of Paul's other epistles and letters.

Daniel

Read through a Christian interpretative lens, Daniel foreshadows the coming of the Messiah as well as the "end time" events in the book of Revelation. Daniel is a very important book for Jesus, who draws his self-referential title "Son of Man" from Daniel 7:13-14; who quotes directly from Daniel 12 in the Olivet Discourse; and who seals his "guilty" verdict before Jerusalem's religious leaders by reference to the book of Daniel.

Ezekiel

If Isaiah is the "thundering prophet" and Jeremiah is the "weeping prophet", then Ezekiel is the "weird prophet"! Taken captive in the second wave of Babylonian attacks on Jerusalem in 597 B.C., Ezekiel writes in Babylon about the 13 "visions" that comprise his book (593-573 B.C.) And strange visions they are! Ezekiel is the "street performer" of the prophets, acting out many of his prophecies in dramatic and strange ways. Join Logos Bible Study's Dr. Bill Creasy as he follows Ezekiel, the weird prophet, in his street theater performance!

Jeremiah

If Isaiah is the "thundering prophet", then Jeremiah is the "weeping prophet". Jeremiah holds the terrible position of being both a priest and a prophet; he represents both the people before God, and God before the people-not unlike a lawyer representing both husband and wife in a contentious and bitter divorce! Join Logos Bible Study's Dr. Bill Creasy as he follows Jeremiah, the "weeping prophet", through his many trials and tribulations.

Isaiah

Prophets are emphatically not seers who gaze into the future and predict far-off events; they are God's spokesmen who always speak into their own historical context. Sometimes what they say may foreshadow messianic or "end time" events, but they always have an immediate historical reference. Understanding a prophet's historical context is essential to understanding his message. Join Logos Bible Study's Dr. Bill Creasy in this dazzling exposition of Isaiah, the first of the major prophets.

Ephesians

Often incorrectly referred to as one of Paul's "prison epistles" (he was not in prison in Rome in A.D. 60-62; he was living in his own rented house, free to come and go as he pleased), Ephesians is a brilliant exposition of Paul's thesis that we are "saved by grace through faith". It is also a glittering display of Paul's rhetorical fireworks. Logos Bible Study's Dr. Bill Creasy examines this extraordinary epistle in detail.

Revelation

Dr. Creasy has noted on many occasions that the Bible-in its final, finished form-is a unified literary work that is linear in structure; its main character is God; its conflict is sin; and its theme is redemption. Viewing the Bible from this perspective, the curtain rises on our story in Genesis 1, and it falls in Revelation 22. From a literary perspective, Revelation is the final chapter in a sprawling 2,000 page, 66-chapter story.

Job

As we know from our own experience: bad things often happen to good people, even when they are fully aligned with God. So what gives? Job explores this paradox, calling into question the fundamental lessons we learn in the first 700 pages of Scripture. Each book after Esther in the Christian canon of the Hebrew Scriptures is a recapitulation into the main narrative. Job takes us back to the start, to the time of Abraham, and it raises serious questions.

Audible Editor Reviews

Many teachers approach the Song of Solomon as an allegory for God's love of the church or of Israel, but Dr. Bill Creasy discusses this work as it is on its surface: an erotic love poem. Listening to biblical scholar Dr. Creasy's analysis of these lyrical poems between a woman and her lover is great fun. In this particular edition of the Logos Bible Study series, Dr. Creasy is on fire. His jokes will make listeners laugh out loud. Much more than standard bible study, this live lecture will be hard to turn off.

Publisher's Summary

As Proverbs fits squarely into the genre of "advice to a son" literature, so the Song of Songs fits squarely into the genre of erotic love poetry. Traditionally read as an allegory of God's love for Israel or of Christ's love for the Church, Logos Bible Study's Dr. Bill Creasy explores the Song of Songs as what it is, first and foremost: an erotic love poem written by Solomon in the final years of his life, a poem tinged with deep regret and longing.